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  1. Jul 11, 2018 · The fateful meal took place on July 9, 1848, when Jane Hunt invited Elizabeth Cady Stanton to her house for tea. Hunt was a Quaker, and she invited three other Quakers—Lucretia Mott and her ...

  2. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution. The foremost advocate of women’s rights in the nineteenth century was the daughter of a Johnston, New York, lawyer and congressman. In 1840 Elizabeth Cady married an antislavery orator, Henry Stanton. They had seven children.

  3. Mar 29, 2023 · Stanton and M’Clintock, then, drafted the document, from M’Clintock’s mahogany tea table. The Declaration of Sentiments set the stage for their convening. Elizabeth Cady Stanton voiced the claims of the antebellum-era conventioneers at Seneca Falls by adopting the same language of colonial revolutionaries, decades prior.

  4. Jul 13, 2011 · Elizabeth Cady Stanton is known for helping to launch the American women's rights movement, but she sometimes also got in the way of that cause. Historian Lori Ginzberg says Stanton often ...

  5. Elizabeth Cady Stanton became one of the leading figures and spokesperson for the movement and her activity brought her into contact with similar women, such as Susan B.Anthony. Stanton would often write speeches for Susan B. Anthony, and they shared a close friendship for over 50 years.

  6. Elizabeth Cady Stanton: A Radical for Women’s Rights. Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1980. The best single volume on Cady Stanton’s life and thought.

  7. 1895 Tribute to Elizabeth Cady Stanton held at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City. 1895 Publishes The Woman’s Bible. 1898 Publishes her autobiography, Eighty Years and More. 1902 Elizabeth Cady Stanton dies in New York City. 1920 Congress ratifies the 19 th Amendment granting women the right to vote.

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